AI Article Synopsis

  • Cannabis smoking primarily affects the airway epithelium, where the endocannabinoid system mediates the effects of inhaled phytocannabinoids.
  • A curated dataset of 1,090 gene expression profiles was created, including healthy individuals and those with asthma and COPD, to explore the endocannabinoid system's role in airway health.
  • The study found significant differences in gene expression related to disease status, with the TRPV1 protein being notably upregulated in asthma patients compared to healthy individuals, suggesting that cannabis users may experience different respiratory responses.

Article Abstract

Cannabis smoking is the dominant route of delivery, with the airway epithelium functioning as the site of first contact. The endocannabinoid system is responsible for mediating the physiological effects of inhaled phytocannabinoids. The expression of the endocannabinoid system in the airway epithelium and contribution to normal physiological responses remains to be defined. To begin to address this knowledge gap, a curated dataset of 1090 unique human bronchial brushing gene expression profiles was created. The dataset included 616 healthy subjects, 136 subjects with asthma, and 338 subjects with COPD. A 32-gene endocannabinoid signature was analysed across all samples with sex and disease-specific analyses performed. Immunohistochemistry and immunoblots were performed to probe and protein expression. CB, CB, and TRPV1 protein signal is detectable in human airway epithelial cells and , justifying examining the downstream endocannabinoid pathway. Sex status was associated with differential expression of 7 of 32 genes. In contrast, disease status was associated with differential expression of 21 of 32 genes in people with asthma and 26 of 32 genes in people with COPD. We confirm at the protein level that TRPV1, the most differentially expressed candidate in our analyses, was upregulated in airway epithelial cells from people with asthma relative to healthy subjects. Our data demonstrate that the endocannabinoid system is expressed in human airway epithelial cells with expression impacted by disease status and minimally by sex. The data suggest that cannabis consumers may have differential physiological responses in the respiratory mucosa.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7737429PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1183/23120541.00128-2020DOI Listing

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